Dear Ian -- If you get any positive responses to your question not posted to the list, I would be interested in knowing of them. Are you familiar with the Making of America site? http://www.umdl.umich.edu/moa/index.html A search under "Baptist" and "New York" brought up some interesting results which added to my knowledge. One "hit" is titled _Fifty Years Among the Baptists_ by David Benedict, published 1860. http://moa.umdl.umich.edu/cgo-bin/moa/sgml/moa-idx?notisd-AJK2010 In any case, I am interested particularly in the records of churches in Jay & Peru, Essex County, around 1812, and of the Belcoda Church in Wheatland prior to 1816. Good luck, Elizabeth Richardson [log in to unmask] ---------- > From: Ian McGiver <[log in to unmask]> > To: [log in to unmask] > Subject: NYS Baptist Records > Date: Friday, July 03, 1998 12:47 PM > > Is anyone familiar with Baptist Church records dating to the late > eighteenth and early-nineteenth centuries and how/where they might be > kept? > > I am researching a Baptist congregation that was organized around 1805 > within > Schoharie County. (I have checked all the usual local sources and, so far, > I have had no luck uncovering any records for this church.) > > I know that there is a Baptist archive in Rochester (the name slips at > the moment and I dod not have my notes at hand). HOWEVER, my understanding > is that most of the Rochester records are from CALVINIST Baptist > congregations. And > I believe that the particular congregation I am interested in tended > toward a FREEWILL faith. And, whereas these distinctions might not have > been so distinct toward the end of the nineteenth century, they seem to > have played an important part in community formation in the early > nineteenth century in the particular locale I am looking at. For example, > I > am noticing that people in one part of this community attended Baptist > services in a calvinist congregation that was several miles away. But > another Baptist congregation (the one I am interested in) existed within > the community. > It is because some members traveled so far to attend a Calvinist > congregation that I suspect that the local Baptist congregation was > Freewill. > But I am not sure about this and whether or not there were genuine > distinctions in ideology and faith. The self-segregation of the Baptists > could simply have been a result of older clan ties that predated > settlement in the community. (that is, the Baptists who travel so far > rather than attend services locally may have simply wanted to associate > with friends and kins from their older neighborhoods.) > > Thanks for your help > > Ian McGiver > Ph.D. Candidate > History > University of Chicago